The Pak Banker

US regulator, Boeing complete 737 MAX test flights

- WASHINGTON -AP

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion and Boeing Co (BA.N) have completed certificat­ion test flights on the 737 MAX, a key milestone toward the plane's return to service, the U.S. regulator said today. The MAX has been grounded since March 2019 after two fatal crashes in five months killed 346 people.

The FAA said it must still evaluate data from the three days of testing and has other tasks to complete. "The agency is following a deliberate process and will take the time it needs to thoroughly review Boeing's work," the FAA said. "We will lift the grounding order only after FAA safety experts are satisfied meets dards."

Boeing declined to comment, saying it would defer to the FAA statement. The tests of Boeing's proposed changes to the automated flight control system on the aircraft are a pivotal moment in the company's worst-ever corporate crisis.

The FAA must complete the data review, approve new pilot training procedures, among other steps, and is unlikely to approve the plane's ungroundin­g until midSeptemb­er, Reuters reported this week.

If that happens, the jet is on a path to resume U.S. service before year-end, in a process plagued by delays. The crisis has cost Boeing more than $18 bilthat the aircraft certificat­ion stanlion, slashed production and hobbled its supply chain, with criminal and congressio­nal investigat­ions still ongoing.

In December, Boeing fired Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg after scrutiny into the jet's design and developmen­t tarnished its reputation with airlines and regulators. A Transporta­tion Department inspector general report first reported by Reuters on Tuesday faulted Boeing for not disclosing informatio­n to the FAA about a key safety system known as MCAS tied to both fatal crashes. Boeing agreed to add significan­t safeguards to MCAS, make other software updates and move wiring bundles that the FAA said posed a safety hazard.

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